Can anyone figure out the address for this apartment building on N. Hill St., year 1919? http://web.csulb.edu/~odinthor/temp.html At first, I thought it was the HS tower looming at upper right; but maybe not...

This Julius Shulman is a little picture heavy, even though I've omitted the black & white images which are duplicated in color. It's "Job 4398: Hayahiko Takase, Kajima Building (Los Angeles, Calif.), 1968". City Hall in the background gives away the location.

Curious note on this house at Mount Vernon and Fairway in the Baldwin Hills, it was the childhood home of Beach Boy Mike Love in the 50's. Brian Wilson was so fond of his childhood memories at his cousin Mike's house that he wrote a bizarre "Fairy Tale" song about it (this was during Brian's terrible early 70's 300lb bed ridden days). It was included as a EP with their 1973 Holland album titled (what else?) Mount Vernon and Fairway (A Fairy Tale):

Many thanks, e_r! The tower is completely consistent with that of the High School; but if the apartment building in question is the one adjacent to the HS on the south, its appearance differs from that of the structure I've otherwise seen at that site (granted, my frame of reference is somewhat earlier than 1919, so maybe it's just a new building). Hmm...

Assuming that we're looking for a building next to the High School, I found the Foot Hill Apartments at 425 N Hill Street in the 1920 CD. That address is consistent with the 1921 Baist map. The online building records say that 425 N Hill was built in 1905 and demolished in 1936. It doesn't look like the apartments originally had a name, but in 1911 and 1913 they appear as the Fort Moore Apartments (they're missing from the 1912 CD). The Foot Hill name is also in the 1913 CD, and appears until 1929. I haven't found any pictures yet.

Many thanks, e_r! The tower is completely consistent with that of the High School; but if the apartment building in question is the one adjacent to the HS on the south, its appearance differs from that of the structure I've otherwise seen at that site (granted, my frame of reference is somewhat earlier than 1919, so maybe it's just a new building). Hmm...

But what's maddening is that the structure in your image should look like 425, instead of foursquare with a widow's walk! But then, if you look at the Sanborn from 1906, the outline of the structure in 1906 looks like the structure in your picture, and not like the building there in 1901/1904...

...which would mean that the apartment house from your image would have had to have been constructed before the 1906 Sanborn but after the ca. 1904 image above. And voilà! The permit from September 1905 for a three-story, 36-room apartment house at 425, just south of the tower. I think we got our man!

Now all we need is a post-'06 picture of that block of N Hill to clinch it...

I tried to find the Glenway Market in the lapl data base, but the only result was in the 1919 Watts directory. (and it was for a Glenway Court), so I came up empty.

I found a single reference to a Glenway Market being at 1800 Glendale Boulevard, although I couldn't work out a date from the source. The entrance on the left of the building currently at that address looks consistent with the picture above. Going by Historic Aerials, there used to be a structure on what is now an empty plot to the left, but it's difficult to see any detail.

GSV

I was curious about the wording of the caption. The term "petrol lorry", coupled with the spelling of "kerbside" and "travelling" suggest that the picture appeared in a publication which used British English. Then I spotted that e_r's eBay link has a .co.uk URL, so it probably does come from a British source.

I found a single reference to a Glenway Market being at 1800 Glendale Boulevard, although I couldn't work out a date from the source. The entrance on the left of the building currently at that address looks consistent with the picture above. Going by Historic Aerials, there used to be a structure on what is now an empty plot to the left, but it's difficult to see any detail.

GSV

I was curious about the wording of the caption. The term "petrol lorry", coupled with the spelling of "kerbside" and "travelling" suggest that the picture appeared in a publication which used British English. Then I spotted that e_r's eBay link has a .co.uk URL, so it probably does come from a British source.

It's being used as a parking lot in the A Star Is Born screen-grab. So what was torn down by 1954?

I'm also curious about the two buildings on the right. -especially the white building (red arrow), -it's lines seem somewhat modern*
while the beige building next to it appears to be a victorian house. (I can see leaded glass about the front window)

*ok, maybe what I'm looking at is something propped up in the back of the truck.

This Julius Shulman is a little picture heavy, even though I've omitted the black & white images which are duplicated in color. It's "Job 4398: Hayahiko Takase, Kajima Building (Los Angeles, Calif.), 1968". City Hall in the background gives away the location.

I'll just post a single "now" picture.

GSV

The Kajima Building was built on the site of Don Antonio Lugo's 1819 adobe. The street on the left (closed in the "now" image) is
the original alignment of San Pedro Street north of Second Street.

Here's the area c. 1910, just after a new, realigned block of San Pedro Street had been cleared between First and Second Streets.
The Lugo Adobe is the long, low building behind the trees. The adobe lost some of its eastern end when the street behind it was built:
CHS-6119 @ USCDL -- http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/cdm/re...coll65/id/4014

This is the inside of the 1st English Lutheran Church at 800 S. Flower, on the SE corner of 8th Street, in 1936. On the
other side of the wall we're looking at is Flower Street:
00075345 @ LAPL -- http://jpg1.lapl.org/00075/00075345.jpg

The exterior of the 1st English Lutheran Church, 1936. The demo permit for the church is dated February 1, 1937.
The church had been dedicated on April 13, 1890:
00075344 @ LAPL -- http://jpg1.lapl.org/00075/00075344.jpg

Here is the church looking a tad overgrown in 1926. Behind it on 8th Street is the 1st M. E. Church (1922) on the
SW corner of 8th and Hope. The tall building at right (1924) is now the Gas Company Lofts:
00075346 @ LAPL -- http://jpg1.lapl.org/00075/00075346.jpg

This 1916 photo looks at the east side of Flower Street toward 8th, with the 1st English Lutheran Church on the corner.
The next building south of the church is 810-12 S. Flower:
00013875 @ LAPL -- http://jpg2.lapl.org/pics08/00013875.jpg

Here is the 1906 Sanborn Map for Flower Street between 8th and 9th:
LAPL

We're looking north on Flower from just south of 9th Street at members of the Los Angeles Bicycle Club. The 1st English
Lutheran Church is in the distance, just to the right of center. This photo has a date of c. 1887, but that is clearly too early.
The building at far left, on the NW corner of 9th and Flower, is on the Sanborn Map in 1906 but not 1894, and we can't
see 810-12 S. Flower here, so the photo can't be later than 1902. Perhaps 1897 would be a good approximate date. Please
note the house above the head of the rider at far left, because you will see it in the next two photos:
CHS-8614 @ USCDL -- http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/cdm/re...coll65/id/8981

The date of this photo is uncertain; either 1897 or 1902. In any case, we see the 1st English Lutheran Church at far right.
If you look at the horse closest to the camera, above its back is the house that was above the head of the rider on the
left in the previous photo. At the extreme left edge of this photo, I think you can see just a bit of 851-57 Flower, on the
NW corner of 9th Street. Please note the home above the two horses' heads, because you will see it in the next photo:
CHS-997 @ USCDL -- http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/cdm/re...oll65/id/10496

This photo, which I've enlarged a bit, has no date. Behind the float are the homes above the bike rider and horses in the last
two photos. The building at right with the flat roof is apparently 831 S. Flower, with the unusual footprint on the Sanborn Map:
UCLA -- http://lit250v.library.ucla.edu/isla.../laviews%3A353